Ali M. El-Agraa

Ali M. El-Agraa
Born (1941-01-01) January 1, 1941
Wad Medani, Sudan
Spouse(s) Diana Latham

Ali M. El-Agraa (born 1 January 1941 in Wad Medani, Sudan) is an economist. He is married Diana Latham Moult, October 20, 1979. Children: Mark Stephen, Frances Hannah.

Biography

Ali left Sudan in 1964 for England where he became a permanent resident and in 1977 acquired British citizenship.

Education

Ali received his earlier education in the Sudan. In 1959, he obtained Division One in the Sudan School Certificate (awarded by the University of Cambridge, UK, in collaboration with the Sudan Examinations Council). In 1961, he took the Intermediate Examinations (roughly equivalent to British A-Levels) in the University of Khartoum with Honours in all three subjects (Economics/Mathematics, Geography and Social Anthropology). In 1964, he was awarded a B.Sc. (Econ) Honours, by the University of Khartoum, externally examined by UK universities, including Cambridge, Oxford and the London School of Economics and Political Science.

For his postgraduate studies, he went to the University of Leeds (UK), where, in 1967, he obtained an M.A. in Economics with Distinction. After becoming a Lecturer in Economics at the University of Khartoum in 1967, he was sent back to the University of Leeds in 1968 to research for his doctorate under the supervision of Professor Arthur Joseph Brown. Before finishing his doctorate, the University of Leeds appointed him Lecturer in Economics in 1971. In 2000, he was awarded a PhD (Doctor of Philosophy) by the University of Leeds for a thesis titled Theoretical and Policy Aspects of Protection and International Economic Cooperation. In 2001, he was awarded a higher doctorate (DSc) by Japan's Kyushu National University for his overall academic record.[1]

Career

Ali was invited to Fukuoka University, Japan, in 1988 while he was a Visiting Professor with the International University of Japan (1984-6), on leave from the University of Leeds (UK), which he joined in 1971, but with which he had been associated since 1964. Upon retirement on March 31 2011, Fukuoka University, in recognition of his contributions to his academic field, made him Emeritus Professor of International Economic Integration.

His main academic field is International Economics, with several books (some translated into Japanese and Chinese) on various aspects of the field. Most of his research is on International Economic Integration, with the 9th edition of his 1980 book, The Economics of the European Community, published as a students’ text in October 2011 by Cambridge University Press.

He has acted as General Consultant for the Anglo-Japanese Economic Institute (London, 1996–2002) and Senior International Consultant for the United Nations (2001). He has also been endowed with a Life-time Visiting Professorship by Wuhan University (People’s Republic of China)n1990–; and, was (jointly with Anthony J Jones) awarded The Daeyang Prize [2] for the best article published in 2008 in the Journal of Economic Integration. He is the author of some economics books[3]

Academic career

Ali began his academic career in 1964 when he was appointed by the University of Khartoum as a Senior Scholar (their official term for Assistant Lecturer) in Economics, in the Faculty of Economic and Social Studies.[4] He was promoted to Lecturer in Economics in 1967. In 1971, he became Lecturer in Economics with the University of Leeds, School of Economic Studies, which became Leeds University Business School, LUBS. He was promoted in 1981 to Senior Lecturer there, a position which he retained until 1993. But before then, he joined Fukuoka University in Japan as the Professor of International Economics and European/American Economies in the Faculty of Commerce,[5] a position he held until retirement on 31 March 2011 as Emeritus Professor of International Economic Integration.

Ali has held several visiting academic positions: Visiting Professor' of the Economics of the European Community at the University of York (UK) during 1980-81; Visiting Professor (of International Economics, Middle Eastern Studies and West European Integration with the Graduate School of International Relations, International University of Japan, during 1984-86; Visiting Professor of the Economics of the European Community, Fudan University, Shanghai in February–March 1985; and Visiting Professor of Economics with Vanderbilt University (Nashville Tennessee, US) during 1997-98. He was also Adjunct Professor of EU Studies (with, inter alia) Kyushu National University, Seinan Gakuin University and Kyushu Sangyo University all in Fukuoka, Japan, for various periods during 1989–2000. He has taught several intensive graduate courses at the Japan International Development Institute, sponsored by the World Bank in Tokyo, Japan in 1986, and Chulalongkorn University, in Bangkok, Thailand, in 2010.

Accolades, consultancies and affiliations

Ali was elected Member of Council, the University of Leeds, during 1980-84 and an Invited Member of Senate during 1979-82, when he was Head of The Office of the University of Leeds Adviser to Overseas Students, now the International Student Office. He was also an elected Member of Council, the University of Leeds, during 1987-90 and an elected Member of Senate, the University of Leeds, during 1983-86.

He was External Examiner for Reading University (UK) for the Department of Economics and its Graduate School of European and International Studies for the M.A. and M.Sc. Degrees in, respectively, Economics and European Integration; he declined invitations to act as such for many UK universities due his absence in Japan. He was also a Member of the Committee of the UK Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC); [6] sponsored International Economics Study Group(IESG) during 1972-88.

Major works

Books written

Books edited

References

  1. http://kushsudan.sd/kushites/ali-m-el-agraa/
  2. "Scientific Prizes awarded by Economics Journals". Archived from the original on 14 December 2002. Retrieved 2014-02-14.
  3. https://www.goodreads.com/author/list/1614225.Ali_M_El_Agraa
  4. "Faculty of Economic and Social Studies". uofk.academia.edu.
  5. "Search in Faculty(Division)– Information of Researchers". resweb2.jhk.adm.fukuoka-u.ac.jp. Retrieved 14 January 2014.
  6. "Home - Economic and Social Research Council". www.esrc.ac.uk.

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